St Andrews beats Oxford and Cambridge to top spot in UK University rankings

The institution has topped the Sunday Times Good University Guide for only the second time in 30 years.

Author: Kara ConwayPublished 15th Sep 2023
Last updated 15th Sep 2023

A Scottish university has knocked Oxford and Cambridge off the top spot in a national league table for the second time in 30 years.

The University of St Andrews has been named the top university in the UK and Scotland by The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide, with the University of Glasgow named as Scottish university of the year.

The Prince and Princess of Wales met while studying at the university in the early 2000s.

St Andrews has beaten both Oxford and Cambridge universities.

Published annually, The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide aims to provide the most comprehensive guide to higher education in the UK.

The guide evaluates everything from satisfaction with teaching quality and the student experience through to degree completion rates and graduate employment prospects.

The University of Glasgow is up one place from last year

Following St Andrews in the Scottish university rankings is the University of Glasgow, which has jumped one place from last year.

First Minister Humza Yousaf attended the university, as did former first minister Nicola Sturgeon.

The University of Edinburgh came in third, dropping one place since last year.

Further north, the University of Aberdeen has jumped one place to fourth, after coming fifth in the rankings last year.

It leapfrogged Glasgow-based University of Strathclyde, which has dropped one place to fifth after coming fourth in last year's rankings.

The University of Dundee has stayed in the same position at sixth.

The University of Edinburgh came in third place

Glasgow Caledonian University and the University of Stirling switched places in this year's rankings, with the Glasgow-based university coming in at seventh and Stirling dropping down one place to eighth.

In Aberdeen, Robert Gordon University has jumped one place in the rankings to 10th place and Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh has also jumped one place to 11th.

But fellow Edinburgh-based university, Heriot Watt, has fallen three places in the rankings, to 12th.

Both Abertay, in Dundee, and the University of the West of Scotland, retained their places of 13th and 14th respectively.

The rankings did not include the University of the Highlands and Islands.

Principal and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Dame Sally Mapstone FRSE, said: "To make history by coming top in both the Times and Guardian University Guides in the same season is a special way to start a new academic year in St Andrews.

"This achievement belongs completely to our fantastic staff and hard-working students.

"It reflects a deep institutional commitment to a critical balance of world-leading research and teaching, and the ways in which St Andrews students respond

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